Tag: jpg

Ubuntu is by far the best operating system in existence. One of the things that hasn’t been broadcast around much is how Ubuntu is also awesome for business.

If you run a business (or work in one) you will know that PDF files are one of the most standard documents that you work with, or would like to work with. Here is a bullet proof list of things that I’m always dealing with and that Ubuntu solves:

people sending .jpg or .tiff or .png files instead of PDFs (unprofessional but a reality)

PDF files being way too big which is unfair to bandwidth, especially if someone will be downloading on a mobile (good percentage chance)

I need to split a bunch of pages, do something, and then glue them back together again and I don’t want to print it all and scan it

I need to watermark or stamp a PDF with something

I need to create a PDF from a word processing document or spreadsheet

These are just some of my regular issues, but great news! All of them will be solved for you in this post, once and for all, and for free.

How to Compress a Big PDF File Without Killing the Quality

Navigate with the terminal to where your over-sized PDF file is (If you don’t know how, go to the section on “File & Directory Commands” on this page.)

In the gobbly-gook that is sitting in step #4 below, change the ‘OUTPUTFILENAME’ to the name you want the resulting file to be named and the INPUTFILENAME to the name of the file that is too big and is sitting in the directory you just navigated to.

copy this gobbly gook into your computer clipboard AFTER doing step #3 to it. I would recommend pasting it to a separate text editor (like body of an email) first, do your changes, and then re-pasting it to the terminal) : gs -sDEVICE=pdfwrite -dCompatibilityLevel=1.4 -dPDFSETTINGS=/default -dNOPAUSE -dQUIET -dBATCH -dDetectDuplicateImages -dCompressFonts=true -r150 -sOutputFile=OUTPUTFILENAME.pdf INPUTFILENAME.pdf

Copy your updated version of the gobbly-gook to the computer’s clipboard

Paste it to the terminal with this *different* version of control V. If you use the normal paste, it won’t work. Do this: control + Shift (same time) then press ‘v’ and it will paste to the terminal.

press the enter key and the process will run

You should now have a smaller PDF file that didn’t lose too much quality. There are other versions of this command above which I found killed the quality too much. This one was great for me.

How to Convert a .jpg or a .tiff or a .png File to a PDF File

Navigate with your terminal to where your .jpg or a .tiff or a .png files are (If you don’t know how, go to the section on “File & Directory Commands” on this page.)

type ‘convert’ and then start typing the name of the file you want to convert. *TIP: after you start typing the file name, you can press ‘tab’ and it will auto fill. If it doesn’t completely auto fill it means there is another file name there similar so you have to type a few more letters and then ‘tab’ again. This saves much time and errors.

start typing the name of the file you want the newly created PDF to be named. Likely it will be the same as the photo name which is great and convenient because you can use the same TIP above with the tab button and it will auto-fill it quickly. Caution: if you use auto-fill make sure you change the last three letters to ‘.pdf’ so that it will actually open as a pdf!

Here is what an example command will look like before you press enter: convert photo_document.png photo_document.pdf

Press enter

If you know how to do basic terminal navigation, this is truly a lightening fast process and super useful. That said, there is probably a light conversion app out there that does this on Ubuntu and I’d like not to use the terminal if possible so please share

How to Take a Multi-Page PDF File and Split Them into Individual Files

go to the Ubuntu software center search and get “PDF Sam”

Use the ‘split’ feature

Mess around with all the options (I don’t have time to do a full tutorial here)

Enjoy!

How to Take a Multi-Page PDF File and Split Them at a Certain Point in the File

go to the Ubuntu software center search and get “PDF Sam”

Use the ‘split’ feature

Make sure you choose the ‘split after these pages’ and the file will ‘cut’ right there. I haven’t tried it but I bet you could put a comma in there after each page number you want to split at and split a whole series of pages….

Enjoy!

How to Watermark or Stamp or Batch Adjust Multiple Pages on a PDF in 10 Easy Steps